BERTRAND Joël wrote:
Mark Morgan Lloyd a écrit :
There are quite simply too many components that won't work any more,
starting off with recent versions of GCC which don't support 32-bit
SPARC, moving on to the kernel and various middleware libraries which
are picky about the version of GCC they require, and so on.
I use a gcc 4.9.2 on a sparc32 running NetBSD or on a Leon4
evaluation board running Linux. Recent gcc can build sparcv7 or v8
binaries without any trouble.
"As of tonight, there is no more SPARC in testing. The main reasons were
lack of porter commitments, problems with the toolchain and continued
stability issues with our machines." http://lwn.net/Articles/596663/
" # Sparc32 support was dropped after Debian 4.0 (etch)
# sparc64 is in poor shape in Debian 7 (wheezy) and will not be included
in later releases" https://wiki.debian.org/PortsSparc
If you see anything to the contrary you need to look carefully at the
publication date, and to make sure that it's referring to the current
"mixed mode" SPARC Linux implementation (i.e. 64-bit kernel with 32-bit
userland) rather than to a revived all-64-bit port.
In practical terms I think that Debian's been "holding the baby" for
some years, accumulating bug reports but getting very little cooperation
from upstream developers.
It's also worth noting that Oracle are dragging their feet over SPARC
Linux, apparently preferring to get people onto Solaris.
--
Mark Morgan Lloyd
markMLl .AT. telemetry.co .DOT. uk
[Opinions above are the author's, not those of his employers or colleagues]
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